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Norway: “EU has no jurisdiction in the Arctic”

Norway's Petroleum and Energy Minister Ola Borten Moe says you don't have to choose between oil drilling or environ''ment in the Arctic. Photo: Thomas Nilsen

Oslo brushes aside the European Parliament’s Environmental Committee’s vote to enter a moratorium on Arctic oil drilling. Petroleum Minister Ola Borten Moe sees no reason to stop now, pointing to the fact that “Norway’s boundaries end almost right up at the North Pole.”

Deputy Oil and Energy Minister Per Rune Henriksen says to the newswire NTB: “ The EU has no jurisdiction in the Arctic, no member country has a Continental Shelf in the Arctic.”

In another interview on the issue with Nationen, quoted by the Foreigner, the Deputy Minister says: “The EU is free to argue what it wants, but this would almost be like us commenting on a camel operations in the Sahara, which we do not have anything to do with.”

MEPs want Arctic moratoriumBarentsObserver reported in September about the unanimous vote in the Environmental Committee of the parliament to introduce a moratorium on Arctic oil drilling. The EU is now working on new and common offshore HSE standards following the Deepwater Horizon environmental disaster in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010.

Norway and Russia are today the two countries in Arctic Europe that are intensifying petroleum activity in the north. Norway has several sites where test drilling take place in the Barents Sea this autumn and seismic vessels are mapping the geology under the seabed all the way north to east of Svalbard.

Russia prepares for oil drilling at the Prirazlomnoye field in the eastern Barents Sea and has seismic vessels mapping the Kara Sea.

No relevance for NorwayWhile members of the European Parliament are voicing their protest against oil drilling in the north, Norwegian authorities are relaxed. The government makes it clear that it does not consider the measures by EU having relevance for Norway.

“But it’s important that we contribute our knowledge and expertise in the Arctic petroleum business, which we have been doing for over 30 years, when the European Parliament starts discussing these issues,” Deputy Minister Per Rune Henriksen says to NTB.

Drill to the North PoleNorway’s free-spoken Petroleum and Energy Minister Ola Borten Moe told Stavanger Aftenblad in the end of August that he disagrees with environmentalists concerned about the consequences of a possible oil spill.

“It seems some think that you have to choose between drilling in the Arctic and the environment. The first well was drilled in this area more than 100 years ago. It is not a new phenomenon. We have an oil company that has a lot of experience and they have a partnership that stretches up to the High North, Ola Borten Moe said.

The Minister is meeting the challenges with optimism and now wants to open new areas for drilling in the southeastern Barents Sea next year.

“I strongly believe that we can meet these challenges together. It’s not a question of whether we can do it, but how.” He continues: “New areas will be opened up. There is no reason to stop now. Norway’s present boundaries end almost right up to the North Pole.”

Severe setback for Arctic oilArctic oil drilling has met a lot of setback over the last month. BarentsObser has compiled this list of political, economical and technical setbacks for Big Oil’s scramble for the Arctic:

The prestigious Shtokman project in the Russian sector of the Barents Sea was officially put on ice.

The drilling rig Scarabeo 8 had a listing incident while drilling for Eni Norway in the western sector of the Barents Sea.

On the Canadian Arctic shelf, Shell announced a delay in its drilling program due to the ice-conditions.

French Total’s chief executive told the Financial Times last week that companies should not drill for oil in the Arctic because of the risk of a damaging spill.

Two weeks ago, Gazprom announced yet another year’s delay on the Prirazlomnaya drilling, Russia’s first offshore field for oil in the European part of the Arctic.

Norway’s Statoil decided this week to stop the work on a possible capacity increase on the Melkøya LNG plant in Finnmark.

The Environmental Audit Committee of Britain’s House of Commons urge a halt in oil and gas drilling in the Arctic, naming it “reckless” until stronger safety measures are put in place.

Melkøya gas processing plant on Norway's Arctic coast is producing LNG from the Snøhvit field in the Barents Sea, the world's northernmost operational gas field.

Photo: Thomas Nilsen / BarentsObserver

The Prirazlomnoye platform is in operation at Russia's first Arctic offshore oil-field. The field is located in the Pechora Sea, east of the Barents Sea. This photo of the platform is taken in the Kola bay.

Photo: Thomas Nilsen / BarentsObserver

Sovcomflot's ice-classed oil tanker "Vasily Dinkov" in the Kola bay.

Photo: Thomas Nilsen / BarentsObserver

The supertanker "Belokamenka" is used as a floating oil terminal in the Kola bay, serving Russia's Arctic oil transport routes.

Photo: Thomas Nilsen / BarentsObserver

The oil platform Polar Pioneer in Tromsø. This platform has been used for oil and gas drilling all over the Norwegian sector of the Barents Sea.

Photo: Thomas Nilsen / BarentsObserver

The tow ice-classed oil-tankers "Varzuga" and "Indiga" are used to sail oil from Murmansk to Siberia along the Northern Sea Route.

RAAHE: Development Manager Juha Miikkulainen doesn’t think the current disagreements between EU and Moscow will affect Finland’s plans for Pyhäjoki nuclear power plant where Russia’s state nuclear corporation Rosatom is heavily involved.

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